Respuesta :

Complete Question

What volume of butane can be produced from the reaction of 13.45 g of carbon and 17.65 L of hydrogen gas at STP ?

Answer:

The volume of butane produced is [tex]V_b = 3.54 \ L[/tex]

Explanation:

From the question we are told that

     The mass of carbon is  [tex]m_c = 13.45 \ g[/tex]

    The volume of hydrogen is [tex]V_h = 17.65\ L[/tex]

The number of moles of carbon is mathematically evaluated as

     [tex]n_c = \frac{m_c}{M_c}[/tex]

Where [tex]M_c[/tex] is the molar mass of carbon which is a constant with value [tex]M_c = 12\ g/mol[/tex]

So  

       [tex]n_c = \frac{13.45}{12}[/tex]

       [tex]n_c = 1.12[/tex]

Now since the volume of the  hydrogen is measured at standard temperature and pressure

    Hence the number of moles of hydrogen is  

    [tex]n_h = \frac{V_h }{22.4}[/tex]

Where 22.4 is a constant

      [tex]n_h = \frac{17.65}{22.4}[/tex]

      [tex]n_h = 0.79[/tex]

Comparing [tex]n_h \ and\ n_c[/tex] we see that hydrogen is the limiting reactant

because [tex]n_h[/tex] is  greater than [tex]n_c[/tex]

The chemical equation for this reaction is

          [tex]4C_{(s)} + 5H_2-{(g)} ----> C_5 H_10_{(g)}[/tex]

looking at chemical equation we see that

   5 moles of hydrogen gas reacts with 4 moles of  carbon to produce 1 mole of  butane

 This implies that

   0.79 moles react with 1.12 moles of carbon to produce x moles of butane

Therefore

         [tex]x = \frac{0.79}{5}[/tex]

         [tex]x = 0.158 \ moles[/tex]

Now since this reaction is carried out at standard temperature and pressure the volume of butane produced will be

             [tex]V_b = 0.158 * 22.4[/tex]

             [tex]V_b = 3.54 \ L[/tex]